Risk for Nicotine Addiction Tied to Mother’s Childbirth Stress

A new study suggests that if you are female, the stress your mother experienced while giving birth can increase your risk of nicotine addiction.

Researchers followed more than 1,000 pairs of mothers and their adult children for 40 years.

They discovered adult women whose mothers had increased levels of stress hormones while they were pregnant are at greater risk of becoming addicted to nicotine.

The 40-year longitudinal study provides the first evidence that prenatal exposure to the class of stress hormones known as glucocorticoids predicts nicotine dependence later in life — but only for daughters.

It also confirms previous research that babies born to moms who smoked when pregnant have an increased risk of nicotine addiction in adulthood.

Researchers found that effects of maternal stress hormones and maternal smoking in pregnancy were additive in predicting nicotine addiction in adult daughters.

The findings, as published online by the journal Biological Psychiatry, underscore the enduring influence of the prenatal environment and the importance of maternal health and well-being during pregnancy.

Lead author Laura Stroud, Ph.D., says the study supports the critical role of the prenatal environment when it comes to risk factors for adult disease.

That is, some people may be predisposed to, or “programmed” for, certain conditions later in life because of exposures during pregnancy, such as stress and maternal smoking.

“While maternal smoking during pregnancy has been shown to be an independent risk factor for nicotine dependence, we didn’t really know – until now – which pathways or mechanisms were responsible. Most prior research involving biological mechanisms had been conducted in animals not humans,” said Stroud.

“Our study suggests that maternal smoking and high stress hormones — often linked to high stress and adverse social conditions—represent a ‘double-hit’ in terms of increasing an offspring’s risk for nicotine addiction as an adult.”

Because mothers who smoke are often more stressed and living in adverse conditions — these findings represent a public health concern and highlight the need to help smoking moms quit and reduce stress levels and improve social conditions for poor pregnant mothers,” Stroud added.

Associations between prenatal exposure to both glucocorticoids — particularly cortisol — and tobacco smoke emerged only for daughters, which Stroud says it consistent with some recent research findings.

“Our findings highlight the particular vulnerability of daughters to long-term adverse outcomes following maternal stress and smoking during pregnancy,” she said.

“Furthermore, if daughters of smoking mothers are more likely to grow up nicotine dependent, the result is dangerous cycle of intergenerational transmission of nicotine addiction,” she added.

Despite the warnings and known health risks, approximately one in five expectant moms in the United States continue to smoke during pregnancy.

Studies have consistently found that prenatal cigarette smoke exposure is associated with increased rates of behavior problems, irritability, attention-deficit and hyperactivity disorder, the risk of violent offenses, conduct disorder, adolescent onset of drug dependence and the risk for criminal arrest in offspring.

This study adds another potential negative outcome — nicotine dependence — to the list of reasons for mothers to stop smoking while pregnant.

Stroud and colleagues studied 1,086 pairs of mothers and their adult children (59 percent female) from the New England Family Study, a 40-year longitudinal follow-up of the Collaborative Perinatal Project based at Brown University.

Maternal smoking during pregnancy was assessed prospectively at each prenatal visit, and the mother’s cortisol, testosterone and cotinine (a nicotine metabolite passed from mother to infant) levels were measured during the third trimester. The adult children’s lifetime nicotine dependence was assessed during a structured interview; the average age at this follow-up was 39.

By studying both maternal smoking and cortisol levels as independent factors, researchers were able to observe whether these two pathways contributed to nicotine dependence in the adult children.

They found increased exposure to prenatal glucocorticoids was associated with a 13 percent increased risk of nictotine dependence in daughters only over the 40-year follow-up.

Mothers who smoked 15 cigarettes a day or more during pregnancy were 52 percent more likely to have a daughter addicted to nicotine.

“Cigarette smoking is the number one cause of preventable disease, illness and premature death worldwide,” said Stroud.

“Eliminating smoking during pregnancy and improving the environmental conditions of poor pregnant mothers continues to be a vital challenge for both clinicians and the public health community.”

She adds that the findings highlight both the need for enhanced strategies for smoking cessation during pregnancy along with the possibility of targeted smoking cessation efforts later in life, where more intense efforts may be warranted for those with a history of family smoking including prenatal exposure.

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About Rick Nauert PhD

Dr. Rick Nauert has over 25 years experience in clinical, administrative and academic healthcare. He is currently an associate professor for Rocky Mountain University of Health Professionals doctoral program in health promotion and wellness. Dr. Nauert began his career as a clinical physical therapist and served as a regional manager for a publicly traded multidisciplinary rehabilitation agency for 12 years. He has masters degrees in health-fitness management and healthcare administration and a doctoral degree from The University of Texas at Austin focused on health care informatics, health administration, health education and health policy. His research efforts included the area of telehealth with a specialty in disease management.